Transcendentalism

Download Report

Transcript Transcendentalism

Transcendentalism
“I would rather sit on a pumpkin and
have it all to myself, than be crowded
on a velvet cushion”
-Thoreau
“Science does not know its debt to
imagination”
“Nature provides exceptions to every
rule”
-Margaret Fuller
“Nothing which has entered into our
experience is ever lost.”
-Ellery Channing
-Emerson
What does
“transcendentalism” mean?
• There is an ideal spiritual state which “transcends”
the physical and empirical.
• A loose collection of eclectic ideas about literature,
philosophy, religion, social reform, and the general
state of American culture.
• Transcendentalism had different meanings for each
person involved in the movement.
Where did it come from?
• Ralph Waldo Emerson gave German philosopher Immanuel
Kant credit for popularizing the term “transcendentalism.”
• It began as a reform movement in the Unitarian church.
• It is not a religion—more accurately, it is a philosophy or form
of spirituality.
• It centered around Boston and Concord, MA. in the mid-1800’s.
• Emerson first expressed his philosophy of transcendentalism in
his essay Nature.
What did Transcendentalists
believe?
The intuitive faculty, instead of the rational or
sensical, became the means for a conscious union of
the individual psyche (known in Sanskrit as Atman)
with the world psyche also known as the Oversoul,
life-force, prime mover or God
Basic Premise #1
An individual is the spiritual
center of the universe, and in
an individual can be found the
clue to nature, history and,
ultimately, the cosmos itself. It is
not a rejection of the existence
of God, but a preference to
explain an individual and the
world in terms of an individual.
Basic Premise #2
The structure of the
universe literally
duplicates the structure
of the individual self—
all knowledge, therefore,
begins with selfknowledge. This is similar
to Aristotle's dictum
"know thyself."
Basic Premise #3
Transcendentalists
accepted the concept
of nature as a living
mystery, full of signs;
nature is symbolic.
Basic Premise #4
The belief that individual virtue and happiness
depend upon self-realization—this depends
upon the reconciliation of two universal
psychological tendencies:
1.
The desire to embrace the whole world—to know
and become one with the world.
2.
The desire to withdraw, remain unique and
separate—an egotistical existence.
Who were the Transcendentalists?
•
•
•
•
•
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Henry David Thoreau
Amos Bronson Alcott
Margaret Fuller
Ellery Channing
Ralph Waldo Emerson
•
•
•
•
1803-1882
Unitarian minister
Poet and essayist
Founded the Transcendental
Club
• Popular lecturer
• Banned from Harvard for 40
years following his Divinity
School address
• Supporter of abolitionism
Henry David Thoreau
• 1817-1862
• Schoolteacher, essayist, poet
• Most famous for Walden and
Civil Disobedience
• Influenced environmental
movement
• Supporter of abolitionism
Amos Bronson Alcott
• 1799-1888
• Teacher and writer
• Founder of Temple School
and Fruitlands
• Introduced art, music, P.E.,
nature study, and field trips;
banished corporal
punishment
• Father of novelist Louisa May
Alcott
Margaret Fuller
• 1810-1850
• Journalist, critic, women’s
rights activist
• First editor of The Dial, a
transcendental journal
• First female journalist to
work on a major
newspaper—The New York
Tribune
• Taught at Alcott’s Temple
School
Ellery Channing
• 1818-1901
• Poet and especially close
friend of Thoreau
• Published the first
biography of Thoreau in
1873—Thoreau, The PoetNaturalist
Resources
• American Transcendental Web:
http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/transcendentalism/index.html
• American Transcendentalism:
http://www.wsu.edu/~campbelld/amlit/amtrans.htm
• PAL: Chapter Four
http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap4/4intro.htm
l